Tempted. Laurel Ames. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Laurel Ames
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Историческая литература
Год издания: 0
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failed, does any of them have an appeal for you?”

      “No.”

      “You’re telling me you are interested in absolutely nothing?”

      “I like poetry.”

      “Poetry? That’s a tough one. Never could quite get it myself.”

      “I only like it because it’s quick to read.”

      “Quick to read, long to understand. Suppose we make a deal. You teach me poetry and I’ll tell you what I know about geometry.”

      “What use is that to me?”

      “Can’t fire a gun, even a little one, without geometry.”

      “I’m a fair shot.”

      “But could you fire a twelve pounder and have the vaguest notion where the ball would fall, what elevation to use to hit your target?”

      “With practice.”

      “Not good enough. You can’t be all day finding the enemy’s range or you would be blown to bits while you are about it. Take it from me, geometry can be useful for a variety of things. Of course, we shall have to tackle algebra first. You will need to know how to solve a formula. Tell you what. You pick out a book of poetry for me to study and I will hunt up my textbooks. They must be at Gram’s house. We’ll start after lunch tomorrow.”

      “I didn’t agree.”

      “Well, I think if you understand poetry, the least you can do is help me out. It isn’t easy courting your sister when I am only an ignorant soldier.”

      “You and Angel?”

      “No, Judith, but keep that quiet if you would. I’m not entirely sure she will have me.”

      “She’d be a fool not to.”

      “What, a murderer? It’s only by the greatest exertion that I will ever prove myself worthy of her.”

      Evan left young Ralph staring at his back. The boy was not much different than the regular run of recruits. One had only to find a common ground, appeal to that and establish a rapport. About lying to the boy and manipulating him, Evan had no qualms. One did what one had to in time of war.

      But this was not war…or was it? Perhaps he had not exaggerated his fears of gaining Judith’s hand, if Lady Mountjoy had any say. What better way to win that good lady over than by helping her recalcitrant son?

      Was there another reason? Perhaps he did see a bit of himself in Ralph. His own rebellion had not been as blatant and he’d had more cause…Of course, he did not know what Ralph’s upbringing had been like. Perhaps it had been worse than his own. He did know his father had a talent for mishandling striplings.

      There was also Judith. Perhaps she was attached to this brooding nephew of hers. Any way he looked at it, helping Ralph had to be a winning proposition, but only if he succeeded. He went to get the key to search for his old textbooks in the attic of the dower house.

      He was right about remembering the place. Except for the covers over Gram’s furniture, it looked the same, and it was heavy with memories of her. She had been like a mother to him. Why this was, he could not quite remember. He thought his own mother must have been rather sickly. He found his trunk of books in his bedroom. It was a room he remembered well. “Why didn’t I come back in time?” he asked the empty air, then went back to the main house.

      

      “Well?”

      Evan jumped, despite his prone position on the bed. That one word shouted at a man comfortably ensconced in the Times made him cringe. “Am I the only one you shout at?”

      “You don’t attend me half the time,” his father said from the doorway. “How else am I to get your attention? Are you going to take the boy in charge?”

      “On one condition.”

      “What is that?”

      “That you do not interfere or question what I am doing.”

      “Interfere?”

      “I had a commander who always trusted me. I might not do things the way he expected, but I always got results. That was enough for him. I should think you could trust me that far.”

      “I have no choice. Nothing I say makes the slightest impression on Ralph.”

      “Well, as long as he regards you as our common nemesis, I may be able to gain his confidence. So have a care you shout at us both in equal measure. I would not want him to think I am conspiring with the enemy.”

      “Nemesis indeed! Do you think I don’t have the boy’s best interests at heart?”

      “No, I believe you do.” Evan’s eyes had strayed back to the paper when a sudden thought struck him. “Only tell me truthfully, was I ever that callow?”

      “You were worse, and sanctimonious into the bargain.”

      Evan shuddered a little. “I am justly punished then. How could you stand me?”

      “I couldn’t.”

      “Oh, yes, I was forgetting.”

      “And don’t think you can steal the paper away to your room every day when others might wish to read it.”

      “Sorry, Father.”

      Lord Mountjoy harrumphed and left. On the way down the stairs he tried to count the number of times Evan or Terry had said that to him, not paying the slightest attention to what they had done, so that he had to issue the same command again the next day. He would never understand these young bloods—never.

      

      Evan rode with Judith again in the morning, and she showed him her favorite paths. Some of these were not entirely suitable for riding, in that they had to duck limbs and brambles and even get off and walk in places. They fetched up in the garden of the dower house to cool the horses. “Father says I can take up living here,” Evan remarked, glancing up at the dusty windows.

      “Oh, I am glad. I do not like to see it shut up like this.”

      “I was thinking of that, too. It’s a big house. It will take some work to set it to rights.”

      “Let me help. I would love to do it.”

      “It strikes me you already do enough for others, perhaps more than you should.”

      “I owe them something, Helen and Lord Mountjoy. They needn’t have brought me here.”

      “But to be ordered about by your sister when you might very well be managing a house of your own…”

      “I am content. I do not know what would have become of us if not for Lord Mountjoy.”

      “How did they meet, anyway?”

      “Sister advertised herself as a housekeeper, but she insisted Angel and I would have to come with her.”

      “Surely she did not offer you as servants?”

      “No, and I believe that is what intrigued Lord Mountjoy. Her very helplessness in the face of financial disaster had a certain appeal to him.”

      “How can you speak about it so objectively? It was your future, too, your disaster.”

      “I had an offer of marriage.” Judith blushed and studied her gloved hands. “At least I thought it was an offer of marriage.” She was feeling more courageous today, perhaps because of the horse.

      “A good offer?”

      “Don’t look at me so. You have no idea what it is like. I did it to help my family, and when he…when it didn’t work out, it seemed wiser to cling together if Lord Mountjoy would allow it.” She finished with a blush, embarrassed once again that she had not confided in him.

      Evan